Would you mind giving me some examples? I am interested to see what others are doing.
Sure, I sent you a pm

Would you mind giving me some examples? I am interested to see what others are doing.
American's don't value education, hard work and discipline and that is reflected in today's students. Instead of forcing education on them we as a society make it easy for them, our schools lower their standards so everybody gets through.
Our school has NO gifted programs. They need to level the playing field, we couldn't have some students far exceeding others, now could we![]()
This is so true. Many parents don't value an education and the cycle starts because now their kids don't value education. Also, parents are their kids first and last teacher and many parents do not believe this. They think the only teacher a kid will have is in school.
My DD's school did away with the gifted program because they needed the teachers for the more intensive programs to bring children up to grade level.
There are no self contained classes and yes all students are given the same material.
The only difference would be an inclusion class would have an extra teacher and/or an aid. During reading, or free time, the spec. ed students would recieve their extra help. Now I think that is great for them, I am not saying they don't deserve an eductaion equal to the other kids but I don't think its fair for all the students. There are some that are well above what is taught in class yet they have no option except to be there, and remain unchallenged.
FTR I do not believe special ed funding should be cut, I just think that there should be more going towards advanced ed, KWIM.
I think that's really the crux of the problem right there. Despite the fact that a lot of these problems really are medical (if you need a doctor to diagnose it's medical imo) the insurance companies won't fund the treatment arguing it's educational. So schools are left holding the bag. Really things like speech therapy, OT, and all of the specialized programs like ABA should be covered by MEDICAL insurance. That's not saying these kids wouldn't need aids; they probably would...but really the aid you see is only part of the funding equation in a lot of special needs cases.
And I agree that if a child is being disruptive that it's not okay.
It's not always like that, and honestly the parents of special ed kids who are having problems in the class room are probably fighting to get their kids a more apropriate placement; if they aren't they should be.
Not true. Here's a link for you.
http://www.units.muohio.edu/eap/about/ncate/programs/pdf/Advising/IS-MildModGifted.pdf
For what it's worth, my DD is a special ed major (currently doing her field base). Part of her education includes how to make accommodation to the curriculum for all of her students. One of her placements so far has been regular ed classes in which she has had to adapt the curriculum for a few students that are above the regular ed students.
Many of the children that we're talking about may not grow up to be leaders but that doesn't mean that they won't be productive members of society. Would you rather spend the money on educating them or providing life-long care?
That's because bringing all children up to grade level is the goal of No Child Left Behind and school funding depends on this. They don't have to worry about the kids that are doing well. The act should have been called The Gifted Child Left behind.
God in and drugs/gangs out....
Hows that.
As a single parent and a former teacher, the problems are complex. There is no simple solution. I had just as many problems with students of two-parent families as I did with those from a single parent home.
Parents need to start taking some responsibility (regardless of how many parents are involved) and stop blaming everyone but their child. Parents need to set expectations for their children and they need to be willing to follow up with consequences if their children don't meet those expectations. I'm not saying that every child needs to have exceptional grades, but every child should be giving their best effort.
If a child falls behind, the parents should examine what they can do to help their child. It needs to be a combined effort between the parents and the teacher. While it is great to boost a child's self-esteem, parents go way overboard. Sometimes, children do bad things or fail. It happens and parents need to accept this and let their children know it is unacceptable.
Children also need to realize that the way to success (rewards, after-school activities, etc.) is through hard work. Why set children up for failure by making them think that life will just hand them whatever they want? I've also worked in the corporate world and have seen a great decline in work ethics over the years. Many young people just think that they should be given the rewards without putting forth effort. This is not a good situation.
Let's not take the easy route and put all the blame on the schools. Society in general has created this situation. We need to re-examine how we view success and the route to reach success and then, apply the necessary changes across the board.
I will admit that I pushed my DD. I let her know that I would never have a problem with the grades she brought home as long as I knew that she had given her best. I stopped worrying about her grades a long time ago, because I know that she will always put forth her best effort. She knows that she is responsible for her own success or failure.
It IS a fact that kids with BOTH parents do SOO much better than just one.
Single parent households is a HUGE issue in America. Kids NEED a mommy and a daddy. They just do.
It IS a fact that kids with BOTH parents do SOO much better than just one.
Single parent households is a HUGE issue in America. Kids NEED a mommy and a daddy. They just do.
Kids who unfortunately are so disabled that they require fulltime one-on-one aides (also paid for out of the school budget) are the ones that sadly will not become "productive" members of society. They are a drain on already limited resources.
Again, focus on the academics. Can the child read, write and calculate at greade level? If yes - then they move on. If no, then they stay back. .